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Vincenzo Danti’s Deceits

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Michael Cole
Affiliation:
Columbia University
Diletta Gamberini
Affiliation:
Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz

Abstract

The great sculptor Vincenzo Danti wrote one of the longest poems to have survived from a Renaissance artist, but the text’s close thematic and conceptual connections to its author’s art have gone entirely unnoticed. What Danti’s poem and sculpture share, this essay argues, is a concern with mystified identity. Danti’s poetic sensibility stands at odds with the biographical frameworks that typically guide the interpretation of Renaissance art and literature. At the same time, his example shows how much there is to be gained from an investigation of how artists learned to be writers, and of what came of those efforts.

Type
Studies
Copyright
Copyright © 2016 Renaissance Society of America

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